Muscle Anatomy & Structure
Physiology of Contraction
Smooth and Cardiac Muscle
Name that muscle
Working out
100

This is the outermost layer of connective tissue that surrounds the entire muscle.

What is the Epimysium?

100

This neurotransmitter is released at the neuromuscular junction to trigger a muscle contraction.

What is Acetylcholine (ACh)?

100

Unlike skeletal muscle, cardiac and smooth muscles are under this type of control.

What is Involuntary?

100

The chest muscle 

What is the pectoralis major?

100

This is when the muscle is able to return to normal pre-exertion levels.

What is recovery period?

200

These are bundles of muscle fibers wrapped together by the perimysium.

What are Fascicles?

200

These ions are released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum and act as the "on switch" for muscle contraction.

What are Calcium ions?

200

While smooth muscle is found in many organs like the stomach, cardiac muscle is found in only this one specific organ.

What is the heart?

200

This is a triangular shaped muscle of the shoulder

What is the deltiod?

200

Max amount of tension produced by a muscle or muscle group.

What is force?

300

This specialized organelle within the muscle fiber stores and releases calcium ions.

What is the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum?

300

These "golf-club" shaped proteins bind to actin to form cross-bridges.

What is Myosin?

300

These are the two primary things smooth muscle controls in the body's blood vessels and airways.

What are Dilation and Constriction?

300

This large muscle on the front of the upper arm is famous for "flexing" and is used to bend the elbow.

What is the biceps?

300

This type of endurance is improved with low level of muscular activity.

What is aerobic endurance? 

400

The functional unit of a skeletal muscle fiber, spanning from one Z-line to the next.


What is a Sarcomere?

400

Calcium binds to this specific protein to move tropomyosin away from active sites.

What is Troponin?

400

This term describes the fact that cardiac muscle can generate its own electrical impulse to beat without needing a signal from the brain.

What is Automaticity?

400

This muscle is on the back of your lower leg, commonly called the calf muscle. 

What is the Gastrocnemius?

400

Amount of time one can perform a specific activity, this is one factor that determines the performance capabilities.

What is endurance? 

500

These invaginations of the sarcolemma allow the electrical impulse to reach the interior of the muscle cell.

What are T-tubules? 

500

This energy molecule is required to "recharge" the myosin head and is also the reason muscles can finally relax and let go of a contraction.

What is ATP?

500

This type of muscle tissue lacks striations because its filaments are not organized into sarcomeres.

What is smooth muscle?

500

The muscle that is most important to help with breathing.

What is the Diaphragm?

500

Produced in muscle cells during intense exercise, this byproduct causes a burning sensation.

What is lactic acid?